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It’s easy to become jaded about announcements in the tech world. Slick, media savvy CEO’s announce “revolutionary” new products with metronomic regularity. Version 1.0 becomes 1.1 and eventually 2.0 and on and on. It all seems like a blur.

Meanwhile, the truly groundbreaking stuff often goes unnoticed (neither the transistor nor the microchip were instant hits). Paradigm shifts come in strange guises, with little or no tangible effect on immediate life and often take decades to make an impact.

Nevertheless, we should take notice at the recent news of the Google-NASA quantum computing partnership which marks the beginning of a new digital paradigm. Although we must account for that which is beyond our present understanding, even the projects currently underway promise a future that seems almost more like science fiction than science fact.

Spooky Action At A Distance

The story begins not last week, or even last year, but in 1911 when a young scientist named Albert Einstein arrived at the Solvay Conference to discuss his discovery of light quanta with the elite physicists of the age. It was somewhat of a coming out for the young man who, although not yet a professor, had overturned much of classical physics.

Niels Bohr and Albert Einstein. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

However, his own idea got away from him and he returned to the 1927 conference as an opponent of the new quantum theory. It was there that he had his famous debates with Niels Bohr and was reported to have insisted that “God does not play dice with the universe.”

“Einstein, stop telling God what to do,” Bohr retorted.

Beyond the issue of whether matter is deterministic or the mere product of probability, what really got under Einstein’s skin was what he called “spooky action at a distance,” the strange phenomenon that we now know as quantum entanglement. He proposed an ingenious experiment that he believed would disprove quantum theory.

It is a measure of the man that his failures have often proved more fruitful than most people’s successes. Einstein’s experiment was carried out at IBM Labs in 1993 and resulted in the first quantum teleportation of matter. The event would finally resolve the 1927 debates in Bohr’s favor and eventually give rise to the project announced last week.

Computing For A Nuclear Age

In the early 1940’s, another promising young scientist named Richard Feynman would find himself included in an altogether different conglomeration of brilliant scientists at Los Alamos, New Mexico. The aim of this gathering, however, was not intellectual debate, but the explosion of an atomic device (put in motion, incidentally, by a letter from Einstein).

Among Feynman’s tasks was managing the unprecedented amount of calculations needed to estimate the potential of an atomic explosion. To do so, he arranged his computers (which, at the time, were humans equipped with mechanical calculators) to each work on part of the problem, a technique now known as parallel computing.

After the war was over it became clear that an infinitely more powerful bomb, based on hydrogen, was theoretically possible. However, the calculations required were thousands of times larger and even Feynman’s method would prove useless. An electronic computer, based on digital technology, was needed to make thermonuclear bombs a reality.

The brilliant mathematician John von Neumann, a friend to both Einstein and Feynman, was assigned the job and he organized a team at Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Study (which, perhaps not surprisingly, was the academic home of Einstein as well) and it was there that the computer architecture was developed that survives to this day.

The End Of Computing As We Know It

Since the 1950’s, the internal technology that powered von Neumann’s architecture has steadily improved, from vacuum tubes to transistors to integrated circuits.. The result has been a doubling of computing power roughly every 18 months, which has enabled all of those slick launches of fancy new gadgets.

However, for some time we have been aware that this advancement would stall, due to physical limitations, sometime around 2020, unless a completely new architecture could be developed. Many believed that the solution would be quantum computing, a new method based on the same “spooky action at a distance” that Bohr and Einstein hotly debated.

So and NASA’s recent announcement, along with a separate announcement that the government has been running a quantum internet for several years, marks a new era in which quantum computing is not only theoretically possible, but thoroughly vetted and technically feasible. Moore’s law will stay intact for the foreseeable future.

In other words, the party will not end, but is indeed just getting started and we can expect the power of our devices to multiply thousands of times over the next generation. Perhaps not surprisingly, we will not use these super-fast, super-secure new computers to do the same things faster, but to do completely different things entirely.

What The Shift Will Mean

In many ways, the Google-NASA partnership represents a new Manhattan Project, but instead of the aim being a nuclear explosion, the goal is to simulate the human brain, a feat that Google's Director of Engineering, Ray Kurzweil, believes will be completed before the end of the next decade.